Want More Local Fresh Food? Then Stop Criminalizing Family Farmers!

By:  John Kinsman, President of Family Farm Defenders

Published by Common Dreams 1/10/12

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/01/10-0

On Wed. Jan. 11th dairy farmer, Vernon Herschberger must appear before a county judge in Baraboo, WI – his crime, providing unpasteurized dairy products from his small herd of about twenty pastured cows to members of his own buying club.  Half way across the continent in ME, Daniel Brown, another family farmer with a small livestock herd was notified on Nov. 8th that he was being sued by the state for selling food and milk without a license.   At the time he was milking one Jersey cow.

In Valencio County, NM, the Hispano Chamber of Commerce was forced to cancel its popular Matanza Festival set for Jan. 28th under pressure from the USDA which said the centuries old tradition of processing and serving pigs on site could no longer be done outside of a federally certified slaughter facility.   Last July in Oak Park, MI bureaucrats threatened Julie Bass with up to three months in jail for daring to grow vegetables in her own front yard.  In Sept. Adam Guerrero, was ordered to remove his kitchen garden because it was deemed a “public nuisance” by Memphis, TN officials.  Apparently, Michelle Obama’s victory garden at the White House falls under a different jurisdiction.

This government crackdown on family farmers is absurd given the current sordid state of our food/farm system and the urgent need to relocalize agriculture for the sake of our health, as well as that of the planet.   Study after study has shown that the most dangerous food is usually that which has endured the most processing and traveled the furthest.

“With millions of Americans contracting food borne illnesses each year, the USDA is committed to supporting research that improves the safety of our nation’s food system,” – this was the comment of USDA Deputy Secretary, Kathleen Merrigan, in a Dec. 15th, 2011 article in Agriview.  In the same issue, it was also revealed that U.S. meat and milk exports had failed to pass the European Union’s standard for drug residues.   Deborah Cera, leader of the drug compliance team at the FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine, admitted there were many violations involving scores of drugs in U.S. livestock.  In a Nov. 17th 2011 article in the Wisconsin State Farmer, Kim Brown-Pokorny of the WI Veterinary Medical Association, warned that Wisconsin was the worst violator nationwide in terms of illegal drug residues in the meat of culled dairy cows.  Yet, there was no mention in either article of prosecuting or penalizing these drug users or even informing U.S. consumers of this obvious food safety threat.

On Wed. Jan. 4th 2012 the FDA announced it would finally ban the use of cephalosporins in livestock by April.  Of course, this is but one small group of antibiotics representing less than .00032% of the 29 million pounds fed to livestock each year.  Doctors use barely 20% of antibiotics in the U.S. to treat human disease  – the other 80% are used on livestock to make them grow faster, and this reckless application is driving the evolution of antibiotic resistant pathogens that now plague our hospitals.

Meanwhile, the USDA, FDA, and various state agricultural agencies are squandering millions in scarce taxpayer dollars to criminalize small family farmers who are at the forefront of providing healthy nutritious fresh food to their communities.   For instance, according to an Aug. 25th, 2011 Natural News story, the WI Dept of Agriculture and Consumer Protection (DATCP) receives up to $80,000 a month from the FDA to wage its current crackdown on raw milk.   The FDA even flew several of its officials out to Wisconsin to join DATCP colleagues for surveillance operations of local farmers’ markets.  This taxpayer subsidized harassment is reminiscent of the discredited National Animal Identification System (NAIS) which was also fueled by millions in USDA dollars funneled to DATCP for the unapproved registration and “identity theft” of family farmers simply to meet compliance quotas.

It is time citizens told elected officials and the public servants within government agencies whose supposed mission is to safeguard our nation’s food supply that enough is enough.  Producing and consuming fresh local food is not a crime.  In fact, every community should have the right to determine what they grow, raise, and eat – this is the underlying principle behind food sovereignty, first elaborated in 1996 by La Via Campesina, the largest umbrella organization for small family farmers in the world.

In March 2011 the citizens of Sedgwick ME, passed the first Local Food and Community Self-Governance Ordinance.  The ordinance states in part that “producers and processors of local foods are exempt from licensure and inspection when the producer is selling directly to a consumer intending to use the product for home consumption, or if the foods are sold at a community social event. Citizens have the right to produce, process, purchase and consume local foods of their choosing, and it shall be unlawful for any law or regulation adopted by the state or federal government to interfere with these rights.”  Since then similar local food ordinances have been adopted by other towns in ME, CA, VT, and MA.

If people in Wisconsin want to enjoy access to fresh local food from family farmers in the future they may need to pass similar ordinances here.  Otherwise, corrupt government under the sway of corporate agribusiness will make sure they have no choice at all.

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Rally for Raw Milk to Defend Local Food!

For Immediate Release                                                                       Jan. 10, 2012
Contact:   John E. Peck, executive director, Family Farm Defenders  #608-260-0900
John Kinsman, president, Family Farm Defenders  #608-986-3815
Wed. Jan. 11th 12:00 Noon   Sauk County Courthouse Steps (515 Oak St. in Baraboo)
Local fresh food advocates will gather and speak out in support of WI farmer, Vernon Herschberger, who must appear in court today for providing healthy unpasteurized dairy products to members of his own buying club.
Speakers will address the real story behind DATCP’s campaign targeting those who produce and enjoy fresh local foods in our state.  According to a story by Natural News (8/15/11), DATCP is receiving up to $80,000 per month from the FDA for this ongoing crackdown against raw milk.  In addition, FDA officials were flown out to Wisconsin to join DATCP colleagues for surveillance operations of local farmers markets.  Similar heavy-handed enforcement operations are targeting other dairy farmers, smallscale food processors, and even urban gardeners and backyard chicken owners across the country.
“The federal government has more important food safety issues to attend to – such as the rampant illegal use of antibiotics in the dairy industry that is contaminating our meat and milk supply.  This effort to criminalize small sustainable farmers is but a crude effort to divert public attention away from the far more serious dangers posed by corporate agribusiness and its industrial factory farm practices,” noted John Kinsman, longtime organic dairy farmer and president of Family Farm Defenders.
Kinsman is referring to widespread news reports that U.S. meat and milk exports recently failed European Union standards for drug residues and that Wisconsin is now the worst violator nationwide in terms of drug abuse in the dairy sector.   In an article in Agriview (12/15/11), USDA Deputy Secretary, Kathleen Merrigan, was quoted as saying “With millions of Americans contracting foodborne illnesses each year, the USDA is committed to supporting research that improves the safety of our nation’s food supply.” Yet, there has been no serious federal or state action to address these latest revelations about our sordid food/farm system.
“This Big Brother in the Barnyard bullying behavior against small dairy farmers like Vernon Herschberger in WI or Daniel Brown in Maine has got to stop,” noted John Peck, executive director. “Not only is it a violation of food sovereignty but it denies people access to local fresh foods that are much safer and nutritious than those which are imported without much regulation or produced in filthy faraway factory farms.”
Citizens will be asked to contact their elected officials in defense of their right to enjoy local fresh food.  Free samples of fresh milk will also be available.
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Occupy the Food System!

By:  Jim Goodman, organic dairy and beef farmer in Wonewoc, WI and board member of Family Farm Defenders.

Published 12/14/11 by www.otherwords.org  and 1/4/12 by the Capital Times (Madison, WI)

Farmers have been through this before — our lives and livelihoods falling under corporate control. It has been an ongoing process: consolidation of markets; consolidation of seed companies; an ever-widening gap between our costs of production and the prices we receive. Some of us are catching on, getting the picture of the real enemy.

The “99 percent” are awakening to the realization that their lives have fallen under corporate control as well. Add up the jobs lost, the health benefits whittled away, and the unions busted, and the bill for Wall Street’s self-centered greed is taking a toll.

It’s not the immigrants, the homeless, the unions, or the farmers that have looted the economy and driven us to the brink of another Great Depression. The public is catching on.

When Occupy Wall Street welcomed the Farmers March to Zuccotti Park in New York on Dec. 4, a natural rural-urban alliance — the Food Justice Movement, gardeners, farmers, seed growers, health care workers, and union members — was formed at Wall Street’s back door.

Change can come only when you confront your oppressors directly on their turf. That makes them uncomfortable, it gets attention, and it wakes up the distracted public.

The occupy movement is doing exactly what the prominent student activist Mario Savio spoke of in 1964, when he declared: “There comes a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop — and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from running at all.”

The people who are now forming a movement to occupy the food system agree with this sentiment too.

The food system isn’t working. People eat too many calories, or too few. There’s too much processed food on our plates. Too many Americans lack access to food that is fresh, nutritious, and locally grown. This is the food system that corporate America has given us. It’s the food system it’s selling to the rest of the world.

Clearly, this system doesn’t have the best interests of the public at heart. Nor does it consider the interests of farmers or farm workers or animals or the environment. It has one interest: profit.

We all have to wake up.

Farmers need access to farm credit, a fair mortgage on their land, fair prices for the food they produce, and seeds that aren’t patented by Monsanto or other big corporations. Consumers need to be able to purchase healthy and local food, and to earn a living wage.

The parallels are pointedly exact. It may be the Wall Street banks that are controlling our lives, or it may be Monsanto, Cargill, DuPont, Kraft, or Tyson’s. The system isn’t working.

Why do agribusiness profits continue to grow while farmers struggle to pay their costs of production and more Americans go hungry? We can’t feed our people if we are forced to feed the bank accounts of the 1 percent.

Agribusinesses insist that we have the responsibility of feeding the world. Growing more genetically engineered corn and soy isn’t going to feed the world, nor will it correct the flaws in our food system; clearly it has created many of them.

The world can feed itself, without corporate America’s science-experiment crops and expensive chemicals. The world’s people can feed themselves if we let them — if we stop the corporate land grabs and let them develop their own economies for their own benefit.

The message from the occupy movement needn’t and shouldn’t be a specific set of demands. It should be about asking the right questions.

Wall Street, the government, and corporate America need to answer one basic question: Why did you sell us down the river?


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Tell Gov. LePage to Stop Criminalizing Maine’s Farmers!

FOOD FOR MAINE’S FUTURE NEEDS YOU TO JOIN OUR CALL FOR MAINE GOVERNOR PAUL LEPAGE TO DROP THE LAWSUIT AGAINST FARMER DAN BROWN!

Sign our petition at:

http://www.change.org/petitions/governor-lepage-drop-the-lawsuit-against-farmer-dan-brown

Dear Gov. Paul LePage,

We, the undersigned, call on you and your administration to withdraw
the lawsuit against Blue Hill farmer Dan Brown of Gravelwood Farm.
Recent rule changes by the Maine Department of Agriculture – including
poultry processing and raw milk sales – are making criminals out of
hard-working Mainers who are growing and processing food to share in
their communities. Now the Department of Agriculture and State of
Maine are suing a man milking one cow and selling jams, pickles, and
other prepared foods from his farmhouse kitchen. If successfully
pursued, this lawsuit will have a chilling effect on Maine’s growing
local food movement and the promise of real economic development in
our rural communities. Shouldn’t Maine’s small-scale, diversified
farms and cottage businesses have the same opportunities generations
before us had, without the threat of lawsuits or armed raids as we are
witnessing around the U.S.?

Read our full letter at www.savingseeds.wordpress.com.

And check out the coverage of our growing movement in the latest issue
of Saving Seeds at
https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1221/images/Saving%20Seeds%20Winter%202012%20Web.pdf.

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Family Farm Defenders Join 1000 Durbans Actions to Support Climate Justice

Wisconsin dairy farmer and FFD board member, Jim Goodman, gave a rousing speech at Occupy Wall Street on Sat. Dec. 3rd as part of the Farmers March to Occupy the Food System.   This was one of many events around the globe organized by La Via Campesina and the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance to demand climate justice at the U.N. COP 17 meeting now underway in Durban, South Africa.

You can watch the YouTube of Jim Goodman’s speech here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Yuh6II3eqk

FFD executive director, John Peck, also participated in a protest against carbon trading outside the Chicago Mercantile Exchange on Mon. Dec. 5th.

You can watch an interview with him, here:

He was joined by about 25- 30 others, including climate justice allies from Occupy Chicago, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization, Rising Tide North America, Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), among others.

The press release for this event is below:

For Immediate Release:
Contact:
John E. Peck, Family Farm Defenders  #608-260-0900 or #608-345-3918
Selene Gonzales, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization #773-762-6991
Raquel Nunez, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization  #773-341-6459

Rally and Speak Out Against the Carbon Traders!

Family Farmers, Urban Gardeners, and Their Allies Expose the Corporate Profiteers Behind False Solutions to the Climate Crisis at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange

Mon. Dec. 5th 12:00 Noon – 2:00 pm
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), 141 W. Jackson Blvd, Chicago

As part of the 1000 Durbans for Climate Justice Days of Action around the globe called by La Via Campesina and the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance, family farmers, urban gardeners and other allies will be converging on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange from 12:00 Noon to 2:00 pm on Mon. Dec. 5th to speak out against carbon trading.

This false solution to the climate crisis only serves to benefit corporate speculators while marginalizing and exploiting the real hope for cooling the planet – namely small-scale sustainable agriculture.

Since 2003, the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) served as North America’s largest carbon offset trading venue, until it went belly up last year.  At its height, the CCX had over 450 traders including the likes of the Farm Bureau and Amtrak to Dupont, Ford, and even the Univ. of California.  But the market eventually succumbed to an over supply of “hot air” credits that drove down the price of carbon from a high of $7.50 per metric ton to less than 5 cents at its demise.
With the collapse of the CCX,  the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has now given the “greenlight” to GreenX as a new designated contract market for carbon trading.  Besides the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), principal GreenX traders include:  Constellation NewEnergy, Credit Suisse Energy, Evolution Markets, Goldman Sachs, ICAP Energy, J.P. Morgan Ventures Energy, Morgan Stanley Capital Group, RNK Capital, Spectron Energy, TFS Energy, Tudor Investment, Vitol, Citigroup, Mizuho Securities USA and Prudential Bache, among others.
Once touted as among the fastest-growing specialties in financial services, the future of carbon trading remains bleak as U.N. climate change negotiations have largely stalled since Copenhagen with no prospect that the Kyoto Protocol will be extended in Durban. According to the London Telegraph (12/4/11) global carbon trading has also fallen prey to criminal racketeering.  Over 100 people have now been arrested in Europe for various schemes bilking investors and taxpayers, involving the “recycling” of already claimed carbon credits and outright theft of others.
“Such flagrant corruption is all the more reason to put an end to carbon trading,” noted John E. Peck, executive director of Family Farm Defenders. “Such commodification of pollution has been a false solution to climate change since the beginning, It just allows those responsible for greenhouse gas emissions to evade responsibility and shift their burden onto current taxpayers and future generations.  Worse yet, carbon trading does not require any actual emission reduction – instead, it just creates another fictitious shell game commodity market ripe for corporate speculation.”

Rising Tide North America, founded over a decade ago, noted in its 2011 International Political Statement that “corporate-friendly and state-sponsored ‘solutions’ to climate change are utterly failing to solve the climate crisis. The current international climate negotiations are flawed and unjust because they are based on the interests of a neo-liberal capitalist globalization that seeks to benefit richer countries and corporations.”  Rising Tide North American shares the assessment of many other climate justice advocates across the globe that carbon trading is just a form of modern-day colonialism.

Joined by supporters of Occupy Chicago, climate justice advocates also plan to invoke the spirit of Charles Dickens by presenting lumps of coal to the worst 1% of corporate scrooges who now profit off the carbon trading conducted within the bowels of the CME.

It is time to say no to a corrupt system that rewards the biggest polluters with a mafia style protection racket that forces victims to pay off the perpetrators of climate injustice.
Pollution is a gross violation of human rights, not just another commodity to be privately traded.   No more green capitalism!  Our carbon is not for sale!
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